Here I present articles, letters and videos about
my Indigenous Peoples' rights advocacy initiatives, accomplishments and related leadership mission in today's
New Age expression of the hippie counterculture revolution.

An introduction to my indigenous peoples' rights advocacy work:

I started my indigenous peoples' rights advocacy work by initiating the Rum River Name-Change Movement.
After initiating this movement, I soon became the co-founder and director ofRum River Name
Change Organization, Inc..

My advocacy work to change the derogatory name of a Minnesota river:

Our effort to
restore the sacred Dakota name Wakan (Spirit) to the "Rum River" has
received support from two Mdewakanton Dakota communities, as well as many organizations
and individuals, including several nationally and three internationally renowned Indigenous
rights activists, a Roman Catholic archbishop, bishop and MN state representative, etc.. We've also
received a letter from the Vatican and support from a representative of a UN Indigenous organization.
Many local businesses, parks, trails, etc. now have the name Spirit River, such as Spirit River Nature Area.
West Rum River Drive was changed to Spirit River Drive. And there is a Watpa Wakan Trail.

My advocacy work on a Minnesota bill to change 13 derogatory geographic place names:

At my request (now retired) Representative Mike Jaros wrote up a 2007 bill to change 13 derogatory
geographic place names. Then, after I addressed the Minnesota Indian Affairs Council and received
its support for Jaros to introduce the bill to the legislature, he did so. The Council also asked
me to write a letter to the legislature expressing its support for the passage of
the bill, which I did.

My advocacy work associated with a USA Today/Arizona Republic article:

Several years ago, I was corresponding with a leader of the
national movement to restore Native names to sacred places. His name is Robert Satiacum. At the time, a USA Today/Arizona
Republic article presented our names and information about our work. The article is titledTribes embrace native names to preserve culture.
The article is subtitled Return to original place names preserves cultures, fixes
wrongs. After this article was published, Minnesota's best-selling daily newspaper, the Star Tribune, subsequently
published an article titled Time to fix Rum River error?

My advocacy work on a Minnesota legislative resolution:

In 1992 Steven Newcomb (Shawnee, Lenape)
and Birgil Kills Straight (Oglala Lakota) started a campaign to set their people
free from the subjugated state of existence imposed upon indigenous peoples around the world by an
international legal construct known as the Doctrine of Discovery, a doctrine based on a
series of 15th century papal bulls. Newcomb recently met with Pope Francis to ask him to
revoke one of those infamous papal bullsInter Caetera and to
also give the pope an article and book he authored. The campaign that Newcomb and Kills
Straight began in 1992 is now a global movement.

At my request Newcomb gave some input into
a Minnesota resolution that I, with Chief
Leonard Wabasha's supervision, wrote and Representative Dean Urdahl edited and introduced
to the MN legislature. The resolution includes a statement about the Doctrine of Discovery.

My advocacy work associated with both, a meeting on the Doctrine of Discovery (DoD) that
I had with a high ranking Roman Catholic archdiocesan official and my related DoD correspondence with prominent
Minnesotans and internationally renowned Steven Newcomb:

Mr. Newcomb helped me edit an article of mine that I publicly posted and then
sent to the Minnesota Council Of Churches. Along with the article I also sent a personal message. In response,
Kim Olstad, the Interfaith/Multi-faith Program Director at Minnesota Council of Churches, informed me that she was involved
with a Saint Paul interfaith organization named SPIN and that it was going to present a series on the
Doctrine of Discovery, called, "Disavowing the Doctrine of Discovery." She also requested a meeting
with me.

I then sent related messages to both, Archbishop John Nienstedt, the Archbishop of the Archdiocese of
Saint Paul and Minneapolis and to Jason Adkins, the Executive Director of the Minnesota Catholic Conference. In the messages I stated
that I believed that Minnesota was coming into the forefront of the global movement to rectify the
injustices caused by the Doctrine of Discovery.

In response to my messages I received a message from Jason Adkins. We began to dialogue. I then received a message from
Archbishop Nienstedt wherein he informed me that Father Erick Rutten, the Head of the Commission on Ecumenism
and Interreligious Affairs would meet with me. We met and had a good dialogue session. Newcomb indirectly participated
in some of the correspondence that I had with these high ranking Roman Catholic officials.

My advocacy work associated with a Wikipedia promoted article of mine, titled: A History Of The Dakota
People In Minnesota:

My advocacy work associated with my writing contributions to a Native news source:

Steven Newcomb is co-founder and co-director of the Indigenous Law Institute. He is a
world-renowned Indigenous rights activist. And he was a columnist for Indian Country Today
Media Network (ICTMN). This newspaper recently came to an end. It had been for years
the world's largest Native news source. This news source occasionally posted a selective comment or two, rarely three, on its
articles. It regularly posted my comments on Newcomb's articles.

In acomment of mine that was posted on an ICTMN article
by Newcomb (an article that was published soon after he met with the pope) I presented the
title and some other information about an article of mine related to his article. I am
referring to my article Native Rights, Pope Francis And The New World Order. I
believe that Newcomb's ICTMN articles were being closely monitored by the Vatican. And I believe
that it is likely that my comments on Newcomb's articles were also monitored and that this website
was (and still is) being monitored by the Holy See.

My advocacy work to establish a peaceful cultural revolution to set indigenous peoples free:

The Circle is the Native American newspaper of Minnesota, covering Native issues, culture
and arts for 35 years. In 2014, the world's largest Native news source published an article by the Chair of the
Minnesota Indian Affairs Council. The article is titled The Truth About Our Origins
Will Set Us All Free. It has three selective comments on it. One sentence in my comment on it reads: This Kevin Leecy's article
is a sign among a number of other signs that indicate that Minnesota is coming into the forefront of the American and global movement that is shining a light on the dark chapters of colonialism, with the aim "to move beyond guilt
and anger to real healing."

My entire comment on Leecy's ICTMN article is presented in an article of mine titled Reconciliation.My article
on The Circle's website is titledHealing The Dakota's Painful Wounds Of Genocide. This article was not
publicly presented in The Circle until after I wrote and posted an article titledNew Age Panentheism. Its first sentence reads:
It appears to me that the whole world is moving toward the acceptance and practice of a One World Religion that will
be similar to the Lakota religion.

My advocacy work associated with Hippyland's promotion of my article titled: UN, Natives And Hippies Unite
To Save The World:

I recently posted an article of mine about the New Age Movement on my website. I also
posted this article here on Hippyland's "New Age" forum. Hippyland is an
over 290,000 registered members interactive website. Its founder and webmaster is Skip Stone. Skip added his "like" to the
article and then initiated e-mail correspondence with me. We have been occasionally corresponding for years. He has my
article UN, Natives And Hippies Unite To Save The World prominently displayed
on his Hippyland site.

A Short Article About My New Age Hippie Counterculture Mission

In an online encyclopidia article about the history of the "New Age" and its current expression within
today's hippie counterculture revolution there is a statement that reads: "From a historical perspective, the New Age
phenomenon is rooted in the counterculture of the 1960s."

The New Age phenomenon is, mostly, a syncretistic ecumenism of the world's religions, spiritual revolution seeking to unite humanity in an
emerging new astrological age. It is highly influenced by Hinduism and Buddhism and, to a lesser extent, by Christian Gnosicism. It is also
highly influenced by a minor religion, the Lakota religion.

"Although not common throughout the counterculture, usage of the terms 'New Age' and 'Age of Aquarius' – used in reference to a
coming era – were found within it, for example appearing on adverts for the Woodstock festival of 1969, and in the lyrics of 'Aquarius',
the opening song of the 1967 musical Hair: The American Tribal Love-Rock Musical." - encyclopidia

The international hippie "non-organization" called the Rainbow Family of Living Light, a family nicknamed the "New Age Rainbow," has many adherents of the New Age hippie
counterculture revolution.

A few years before a 2015 Time Magazine article chronicled "today’s hippie counterculture movement," the world's
largest Indian news source, Indian Country Today Media Network, published an article that promoted a book titled Hippies, Indians and the Fight for Red Power. This same book is
promoted in a 2015 article by Dina Gilio-Whitaker, an associate scholar at the Center for
World Indigenous Studies.

In the article, Gilio-Whitaker wrote: "The uproar about the Rainbow Family Gathering in the Black Hills reminds us that the
counterculture is alive and well in the US. Not just a relic of a forgotten era..." In the article she also states that
"in the 1960's and 70's counterculture hippies were important allies" who "helped advance" the Red Power movement.

"Those who attend Rainbow Gatherings usually share an interest in intentional communities, ecology, New Age
spirituality and entheogens." (ref.)... [At Rainbow Gatherings] "New Age beliefs are prevalent." (encyclopidia ref.)(ref.)

There is an over 290,000 registered members interactive website named Hippyland with a sister site
named Cool that, in respect to both sites, occasionally and prominently promote my [New Age] hippie counterculture mission. Several of
my submitted Cool articles on this topic are exclusively posted on a web page by Skip Stone, the founder and webmaster of Hippyland
and Cool.

When referring primarily to the hippie spiritual revolution that began in the 1960s, a revolution that was an expression
of the New Age spiritual philosophy and highly influenced by the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and the Beatles, Peter R. Jones, an
internationally renowned Christian theologian, lecturer and author, wrote: Indeed, the Sixties was a spiritual revolution
that has now morphed into a worldview that promises to alter how we all believe and act in the planetary era.

And in a popular contemporary video produced by the
author of the best-selling book Gods of the New Age, a video about the Beatles' 1960s
promotion of the New Age spiritual philosophy, the video's [anti-New Age] narrators (including the video's producer
Caryl Matrisciana) present evidence
and acknowledge that the Beatles' promotion of the New Age spiritual philosophy was originally accepted, globally...and
that because of the Beatles' inspired New Age hippie counterculture revolution, a revolution that radically changed
a generation's perspective on the meaning of life, "it is still rapidly gaining global acceptance, today."

Some evidence of this contemporary "global acceptance" of the New Age spiritual philosophy can also be found in an
Ananda Sangha Worldwidearticle about Ananda, a global movement that promotes the 1967 spiritual consciousness of the
Beatles, who at the time were (mostly George Harrison) promoting the teachings of Paramahansa Yogananda.

ONE-WORLD NEW AGE SPIRITUAL PHILOSOPHY:A HIPPIE
WORLD UNITY SIGN(pictured below) is prominently displayed in a Caryl Productions 2012
video about a large contemporary New Age/New Spirituality "Christian" movement that is portrayed
as a new expression of the hippie spiritual revolution. The video is titled: WIDE IS THE GATE - The
Emerging New ChristianityVOLUME 1andVOLUME 2. There is also a green hippie peace
sign on the cover of the video's advertised DVD.

An article of mine about my Indigenous Peoples' rights advocacy work and related New Age hippie counterculture
mission is locatedhere.

The Circle is the Native American newspaper of Minnesota, covering Native issues, culture
and arts for 35 years. In 2014, the world's largest Native news source published an article by the Chair of the
Minnesota Indian Affairs Council. The article is titled The Truth About Our Origins
Will Set Us All Free. It has three selective comments on it. One sentence in my comment on it reads: This Kevin Leecy's article
is a sign among a number of other signs that indicate that Minnesota is coming into the forefront of the American and global movement that is shining a light on the dark chapters of colonialism, with the aim "to move beyond guilt
and anger to real healing." My entire comment is presented in an article titled Reconciliation.My article
on The Circle's website is titledHealing The Dakota's Painful Wounds Of Genocide.

When my comment on this article by Kevin Leecy was first posted, apparently,
because of how grandiose it was, the Minnesota Native leaders who I had been corresponding and occasionally meeting
with discontinued their correspondence and meetings with me. However, on Feb. 23, 2018, I discovered that a 2010 article of mine
had recently been publicly presented on The Circle's website. Apparently, on September 22, 2010, the editor of "The Circle" privately
posted an article of mine that promotes the establishment of a peaceful cultural revolution...and then early in the month
of February 2018 she publicly presented this article on The Circle's website. And did so, primarily because (I assume) she
liked a January 2018 article of mine titledNew Age Panentheism. And the Mdewakanton Dakota
Chief, Leonard Wabasha, probably gave his approval. The first sentence in this article reads: It appears to me that the whole world is moving toward
the acceptance and practice of a One World Religion that will be similar to the Lakota religion.

A Minnesota House Concurrent ResolutionTo view and read the March 17, 2010 house concurrent resolution
expressing regret for conflicts between Native Americans and
European settlers, a resolution that is made up of mostly
wording from the draft resolution that I wrote, clickresolution

A formed newspaper that was named Indian Country Today Media Network was
for years the world's largest Indian news source. Links to old ICTMN letters and comments of mine are
presented below. ICTMN generally only posted a comment of two on its articles. A lot of
my comments are on articles by Steven Newcomb, a former ICTMN columnist and a nationally and
internationally renowned Indian/Native activist.